Click Here for More Images from iStock- 15% off with coupon 15FREEIMAGES 
...an old Spanish coin, a means of payment from the Iberian Peninsula made of metal
Appearance:\nIt has a rusty orange colour to the wings, upper body and the tips of the antennae. The body is silvery white below and it has a wingspan of 25–30 mm. This butterfly is very similar in appearance to the Essex skipper (Thymelicus lineola). In the small skipper, the undersides of the tips of the antennae are yellow orange, whereas they are black in the Essex skipper. The black area on the lower edge of the upper wings also differs. Like the other orange grass skippers the male has a distinctive black stripe made up of scent scales.\n\nLife cycle and food plants:\nEggs are laid loosely inside grass sheaths of the caterpillars food plants from July to August. The newly hatched caterpillars eat their own eggshell before entering hibernation individually in a protective cocoon of a grass sheath sealed with silk. In the spring the caterpillar begins feeding. The favoured food plant is Yorkshire fog (Holcus lanatus), although other recorded food plants include timothy (Phleum pratense), creeping soft grass (Holcus mollis), false brome (Brachypodium sylvaticum), meadow foxtail (Alopecurus pratensis) and cock's foot (Dactylis glomerata). The caterpillars pupate near the base of the food plant in June with the first adults on the wing at the end of June, a week or two before the first Essex skippers. They are strongly attracted to purple flowers such as thistles and knapweeds.\n\nDistribution:\nThis butterfly's range includes much of Europe (east to the Urals, including Ireland, Britain and Scandinavia, and includes north Africa and the Middle East. It is typically occurring where grass has grown tall.\n\nThis Picture is made during a Long Weekend in the South of Belgium in June 2019.
Adult Male Lovebug Insect of the Genus Plecia
Tiger and king prawns lie on a light table. Frozen products in ice glaze.
Fossil fern foliage of Asterotheca arborescens. 300 Myo; Asterotheca arborescens; Carboniferous period; Fossil fern; Illinois; Pennsylvanian period; black; brown; color image; extinct; foliage; fossil; fossiliferous rock; geologic specimen; horizontal; no people; palaeontology; photograph; photography
Closeup view of a colorful grass moth (Eurrhyparodes bracteolalis), revealing the mesmerizing details of its delicate wings and the beauty within the small wonders of nature
Closed up Butterfly spreading wings on leaf - looking at camera.
A closeup of the black arches or nun moth, Lymantria monacha, sitting on wood in the garden
Euphorbia x martini 'Ascot Rainbow' in Kent, England
Photomicrograph of member of daphnia family, possibly Simocephalus vetulus. Live specimen. Adult 2 mm long. Wet mount, 2.5X objective, transmitted brightfield illumination. Note - motion blur of live animal, very shallow depth of field, chromatic aberration and uneven focus are inherent in light microscopy.
Pyrgus sidea on the flower
Ichneumon wasp
Wood, Wooden Board,\nTree rings
Black Soldier fly (Hermetia illucens)
Small butterfly on flower.
Beautiful abstract photography of mold  in a pan
A fly pauses on a leaf in Bali, Indonesia
photo of green fly on plant stem. selective focus
Closeup photo of a worn, weathered, grey rock surface on the south coast of NSW
butterfly on the flower in spring
Macro Photography. Closeup photo of Blue fly or Calliphora vomitoria or commonly called the orange-bearded blue bottle fly above a red flower in Bandung city - Indonesia
Butterfly and compound eyes on leaf.
Sylvaine sur plante non identifiée
Bivalvia Fossil inside a limestone rock on moss floor. Gastropods from the jurassic period captured during autumn season.
White moth on white wall
Deilephila porcellus, the small elephant hawk-moth, is a moth of the family Sphingidae. The species was first described by Carl Linnaeus in his 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae.\nDescription:\nThe wingspan is 45–51 millimeters . The moth flies from May to July depending on the location. The forewings are ochreous with a faint olive tinge; the front margin is edged and blotched with pinkish, and there is a broad but irregular band of the same colour on the outer margin. The hindwings are blackish on their upper margin, pinkish on their outer margin, and ochreous tinged with olive between. The fringes are chequered whitish, sometimes tinged with pink. The head, thorax, and body are pinkish, more or less variegated with olive; the thorax has a patch of white hairs above the base of the wings. \nLarvae:\nThe larva is greyish brown or darker grey, merging into yellowish brown on the front rings. The head is greyer than the body. The usual sphingid horn is absent, and in its place there is a double wart. In the early instars the caterpillar is pale greyish green with blackish bristles, and the head and under surface are yellowish. \nThe larvae feed on Galium and Epilobium. \nEcology:\nIt is found in Europe coastal areas, heaths and meadowland edges where Galium is present. Up to 1600 m in the Alps and Spain but in North Africa, Turkey up to 2000 m. In central Iran and central Asia open, arid montane forest, or scrub. Usually found at 2000 to 2500 m.\nDistribution:\nIt is found in Europe, North Africa and western Asia (source Wikipedia).\n\nThis Picture was made during a walk in a Sand Dune Area (Wekeromse Zand) in June 2005. The Moth was hatched near the Food Plant Galium.
Close up of a butterfly
Fly with bright red eyes on plant stem
Free Images: "bestof:Rsci094.jpg Rapala scintilla Seitz Macrolepidoptera 1917 Of plate Unknown PD-old The Macrolepidoptera of the World - derivative Rapala scintilla"
Terms of Use   Search of the Day